For the answer to the question above asking at $5 a bushel, there is an excess supply of wheat. is this price above or below the equilibrium price?
I think it is a price floor above the equilibrium price.The price is too high so that the suppliers will produce more than the consumption.
After a little searching I found the answer choices to your question. They are:
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1) The two economic laws exist in theory. They have no relation to economics in the real world.
2)The two economic laws exist in theory. They work in practice, but real-world factors can have an effect.
3)The two economic laws work in practice. They apply to real-world economics eighty percent of the time.
4)The two economic laws work in practice. They prove to be true in the real world one hundred percent of the time.
The answer to your question is 4.</span>
Answer:
<em>B, Preparing for the experiment, several slides were fixed with dye.</em>
Explanation:
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Modifiers</h3>
Modifiers are simple words or phrases used to add emphasis to another word in a sentence. Adjectives and adverbs are used to provide emphasis to nouns and verbs respectively. Clauses and phrases can also be used as modifiers in a sentence. <em>The </em><em>nice </em><em>Child; </em><em> </em>In the example, the adjective shows us that the Child is nice and it is the modifier.
<h3>Dangling Modifiers</h3>
A modifier is considered dangling when the word that its will modifier is not contained in the sentence. For example, the nice ........; the nice in this example is dangling because it does not have a word to modify.
Preparing for the experiment, several slides were fixed with dye contains a dangling modifier. "Preparing for experiment" is expressing an action, but the person experimenting is not known. Since the person performing the experiment is not known the phrase "<em>preparing for the experiment</em>" is considered a dangling modifier because it is not modifying any word in the sentence.
<span>Answer King Hammurabi was the sixth ruler of ancient Babylon, and first dynasty king of the Babylonian ...</span><span>
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